In Spain, getting a job in Government is even riskier than joining a start-up these days. So why not take the entrepreneurial option, writes José María Cobián. More »
Student entrepreneurship quango NACUE has its heart in the right place, but it's driving away precisely those entrepreneurs on whose promise it secured taxpayer cash, writes Isaac Lewis. More »
Many American start-ups have never known hard times, writes Ilya Lichtenstein, but they're about to. The good news for Europe is that many start-ups here are already used to inclement conditions. More »
Frictionless sharing is simply a way of forcibly mobilising a user base, writes George Osborn. Claims that it's somehow useful or more natural are bunk. More »
Attend most British tech start-up events and you’ll be blown away by the underwhelming scale of ambition, writes Alan Gleeson. Perhaps it's time to incentivise entrepreneurs to solve bigger problems. More »
In the second of a series of monthly columns, Zuora chief executive Tien Tzuo says that Britain’s international purview will help make it a technology hotspot. More »
Mike O'Brien believes that the entrepreneurs in London's Old Street need to knuckle down. What ever happened to the work ethic of their recent predecessors? More »
Arguments about female chief executives and the number of women on boards ignore a deeper structural problem in today's corporates, writes Inmaculada Martinez. More »
Lawyer Kathryn Wynn explains why, although the furore surrounding the Government's Communications Data Bill is probably misjudged, there are devils in the detail the Government should consider. More »
In the first in a series of monthly columns, Zuora chief executive Tien Tzuo explains how the UK can place itself more firmly on the global entrepreneurial map. More »